Humans are a migratory species
All humans come from sub-Saharan Africa
Mercantile period: flows out of Europe due to colonization and economic growth
Plantation production
Industrial period: migration out of Europe and into the Americas/Oceania due to the spread of industrialism to former colonies in the New World
Period of limited migration: adoption of restrictive immigration laws
Post-industrial migration: immigration became global and immigrants entered countries of the Third World
The European shift from exporting to importing labour was notable because it involved the widespread movement of migrants to countries that were not intensive in land
European governments sought to recruit temporary migrants but they decided to stay permanently and invite their families
Implementation of immigration restrictions
Western Europe had become a multiracial and multi-ethnic society
Today: imbalance between labour supply and demand in the Third World
Today’s immigrant-receiving societies are far more intensive in capital and much less intensive in land than destination countries of the past
Immigrant: are no longer perceived as wanted or needed
Criticisms:
Neoclassical economic perspective: economic disparities alone are not enough to explain international movement
Zelinsky’s model: emphasis on proximity to a receiving area
Push-pull framework: migration enables a certain equilibrium to be achieved between forces of economic growth and contraction in different geographical regions
Macro-theory: international migration is caused by geographic differences in supply of and demand for labour
Micro-theory: individuals decide to migrate because a cost-benefit calculation leads them to expect a positive net return, usually monetary, from movement
New economics of migration: migration decisions are made by large units of related people (families, communities) in which people act collectively to maximize expected income and minimize risks and to loosen constraints associated with various kinds of market failures
Segmented labour market theory: international migration stems from the intrinsic labour demands of modern industrial societies
Historical-structural theory: because political power in unequally distributed across nations, the expansion of global capitalism acted to perpetuate inequalities and reinforce a stratified economic order
Dependency theory
World systems theory
Social capital theory: social capital plays a positive role in the acquisition and accumulation of other forms of capital and is a strong influence for migrant workers
Theory of cumulative causation: over time, international migration tends to sustain itself in ways that make additional movement progressively more likely